Slave Amp or Power Amp ???

So what's the difference between a slave amp and a power amp? Particularly interested in using a power amp rather than a slave amp to add watts to the existing amp on a bass rig. Is this possible and/or a good thing? If so, how would I hook the 2 together?

I think I asked the same sorta question on a Carvin amp thread today, no replies yet. But I wanted to buy a Carvin DCM1500 power amp or similar amp, to hook it up to my GBE750 amp head. I play this huge room about twice a month, no PA support, loud gitard and I wanted to run a Carvin amp thru my head to get about 1500 watts bridged at 4 ohms.

My amp works fine for all my other gigs but this huge room takes all I can give my GB amp, the clip lite just stays lit too much for me to feel safe, no distortion but I think that's next. Ive taken as much lows out as I can, added mids and highs more than I ever do. So I too would like to know how I could hookup a, prolly Carvin, power amp to my GBE750 head.

What inputs/outputs would I use? what type and how many cables do I need? And mostly is this even do-able? I think we're on the same topic here. Anybody?

Your amp head should have a jack that says "preamp out" or "line out". Run that output to the input on the power amp. Easy-peasy, only one extra cable needed. Oh yeah, unless you are using a combo amp, in which case you'll need an external speaker cab that can handle the extra wattage, and a cable for that to connect to the power amp. For the connection out of the preamp into the power amp, double check the manuals for both devices to see whether you need a balanced (TRS) or unbalanced (TS) cable.

I think I asked the same sorta question on a Carvin amp thread today, no replies yet. But I wanted to buy a Carvin DCM1500 power amp or similar amp, to hook it up to my GBE750 amp head. I play this huge room about twice a month, no PA support, loud gitard and I wanted to run a Carvin amp thru my head to get about 1500 watts bridged at 4 ohms.

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If you don't have speakers that can make use of the extra power it will make little, if any, difference. OTOH adding a second identical speaker with your existing amp will give an additional 6dB output, the equivalent of four times the power you now have.

Yeah I usually use 2 cabs at big rooms, NV215 + GB Neox 212T w/GBE750 both 4 ohms, amp can do 2 ohms. It's quite loud for that big room but I do see the clip lite way too much for my eyes, no distort, just too much clip on too many notes.

And I know how we all feel about this but NO PA for bass with this band. Only 2 15" Carvin PA cabs on stands, 3 vox & kick drum in PA only. Loud@zz guitard, loud but very good vocalist and many Harley's coming/going all thru our gig, front garage type doors wide open, just a big, loud place.

I even emailed Jim @ Bergantino asking him which other of his cabs would match up well with my NV215 and he implied that a more powerful amp would open up the NV215 cab. Dont really want to buy/use another amp head. So I figured, though being very careful with volume and low knobs, to add a power amp thru my GBE750 and try the NV215 alone, bridged @ 4 ohms aprox 1500 watts with that Carvin amp. I'd also have the 2nd cab 212T, handy if the NV gets to working too hard, so I guess my new power amp needs to do 2 ohms or a good +600 watts into each channel at 4 ohms.

Been wanting to use NV stand alone at some big gigs and Im getting real close to talking band into running just a little bass thru the mains, may just happen. So without adding a 3rd cab or having to buy a 2nd larger cab, will the external power amp work for me with the NV cab? Its rated 600 watts so I'd be careful with the possible bridged 1200+ watts or so into it. Just trying things out to get good, clean and loud.

will hookingup a external power amp then bypass a amp heads' internal amp, thereby only sending the external amps' power into any cabs? Correct?

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The main amp's power section will still be running. You could plug a cab into that as well as the power amp. As long as it's a solid state power section though theres no real need to plug anything into it though.

No amp can output more power than it's stated value. When you use an amp as a slave, it doesn't suddenly go from it's stated power output to that output plus the stated output of the master amp.

Therefore, each amp you're using must have speakers hooked up to it to get a total output of the combined amps power.

For large halls I use my SVT-2 Pro with my Stewart 1.2 as a slave. Each amp has 2 Markbass 410 cabinets hooked up to it. The SVT pre-amps the Stewart and therefore controls the "tone" of all my cabinets. I can use the output masters on the Stewart to control the volume of the cabs hooked up to it. Total watts for this set up is around 1500 watts. Shockingly clean enough to require the "drive" on my SVT to be pushed a bit. No clipping!

In my mind a slave amp is a power amp Identical in looks to a master head using the same output stage as the master but with only a volume control. The idea was to drive cabinets with each but only need to mess with the controls of the master to affect them all. In practice the slave would cost virtually the same to make as the master and players thought it looked cooler to have identical amps. Slave amps are quite rare.

A power amp is usually stereo and SS although some tube ones do exist.